Chiness New Year 2009
26-28 January 2009
Get ready for noisy firecrackers, colourful sprocessions and local entertainment as the Phuket enters the Year of the Dog this January. Vibrant celebrations and super shopping bargains are on offer as Phuket's local Chinese community prepares for its most important festival.
Adding to the celebrations is the Old Phuket Festival, held in the old Sino - Portuguese quarter of Phuket Town each year. Entertainment and highlights like the Dragon Procession promise a kaleidoscope of colour in the streets during the two day festival.
New Year Food
As well as Phuket's usual array of delectable food, Chinese New Year provides the perfect opportunity to sample special delicacies. Probably more food is eaten during the New Year celebrations than any other time of the year with huge amounts of traditional fare prepared for family, friends and ancestors. Certain kinds of food eaten at this time are considered lucky, with specific ingredients added for a little extra luck during the coming year. Others like Fresh bean curd or tofu - considered unlucky are given a wide berth in favour of more auspicious fare.
Food plays an integral part in the traditional celebrations. On New Year's Eve, Chinese families celebrate with a special dinner dedicated to the spirits of the ancestors - revered for their past contributions to the family fortunes. The communal feast of weilu, literally "surrounding the stove" is arranged around the family banquet table and is a way of joining the spirits of the past with the family of the present, symbolizing family unity.
Chinese New Year Decorations
Throughout Phuket town, during New Year you'll see Chinese houses with their living rooms decorated with vases of flowers, platters of oranges and tangerines and a tray with eight varieties of dried sweet fruit. The entrances of many shops and houses will be festooned in red banners and decorations to encourage luck and happiness during the coming year.
Red is considered a bright, happy colour, so many people wear red for a sunny and bright future. It is believed that appearance and attitude during New Year's sets the tone for the rest of the year so children and unmarried friends, as well as close relatives are given "lai see" little red envelopes with money inside, for good fortune.
Oranges and tangerines, symbols of abundant happiness, must be taken as a gift if you are visiting a Chinese family during the two week celebrations to ensure a long relationship with the person you're visiting.
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